The Western Journal

Collectors eye ‘impossibly rare’ bottle of Hitler’s Bordeaux

The article discusses a highly rare collectible: a bottle of Bordeaux wine from Adolf Hitler’s personal wine cellar at his Berghof mountain retreat. The bottle, a 1934 St. Emilion, is considered exceptionally scarce and is set to be auctioned online by Alexander Historical auctions in Maryland. Despite the wine being undrinkable due to a damaged cork, interest among World War II memorabilia collectors is strong, with bids already reaching meaningful amounts before the auction begins.

alexander Historical Auctions’ president Bill Panagopulos described the bottle as an “impossibly rare” item, noting that it was smuggled out of the Berghof by a U.S. Army soldier tasked with demolishing Hitler’s residence at the end of World War II. The provenance includes documentation from a noted militaria dealer confirming it’s origin from Hitler’s wine cellar.

The auction also features other items connected to infamous historical figures, such as a gold pen and pencil set owned by Hitler and al Capone’s personal teacup, attracting further collector interest. Panagopulos explained that collectors value these artifacts not as icons but as historically significant relics tied to notorious individuals,highlighting their importance for both historical context and storytelling.


Collectors eye ‘impossibly rare’ bottle of Hitler’s Bordeaux

Of all the possessions of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler snuck out of Germany by troops, few are considered as rare as a bottle of Bordeaux from his Berghof wine cellar.

One, a 1934 St. Emilion, has emerged, and World War II collectors are readying their bids for the bottle set for an online auction Wednesday at Alexander Historical Auctions of Elkton, Maryland.

Alexander President Bill Panagopulos called the relic “an impossibly rare item to obtain, a bottle of wine from Adolf Hitler’s personal wine cellar at his mountain retreat, the Berghof.”

Hitler’s wine bottle

Over nearly two decades, Secrets has covered the historically important auctions held by Panagopulos. They have often featured items slipped out of the Berghof by soldiers sent to the Bavarian Alps to destroy the resort. He has described very few as “impossibly rare.”

Even before the auction opened for the bottle that he valued at $5,000 to $7,000, one bidder offered $2,500, even though the wine was described as undrinkable due to a damaged cork.

Other items once owned by the madman included in the auction are also drawing the interest of collectors, including a gold pen and pencil set that already has a bid of $4,250.

Panagopulos said that for some bidders, the links to history are important. But others like to collect the artifacts of “bad guys” he has featured, including Charles Manson and Al Capone. The Wednesday auction features Capone’s teacup, expected to sell for up to $3,000.

“Personally-owned possessions of ‘bad guys,’ like those of heroes, have always been sought by collectors. They don’t get treated like icons, but more like a museum relic of the original owner, good or bad,” Panagopulos said.

Bidders, he added, also chase items with air-tight provenance and a good story, and the bottle of Hitler’s St. Emilion has both.

SEE THE LATEST POLITICAL NEWS AND BUZZ FROM WASHINGTON SECRETS

Here’s how the Alexander website described the wine:

An impossibly rare item to obtain, a bottle of wine from Adolf Hitler’s personal wine cellar at his mountain retreat, the Berghof. The bottle, now but half-full (and certainly not drinkable), is a 1934 St. Emilion bearing a paper label so stating, with an image of the churchy at St. Emilion and indicating that the wine came from ‘Frankenreich,’ or German-occupied France. The bottle is held by a wire cage holding it at a slight tilt, which may have been added later. This item was purchased by one of America’s most noted collectors of German military documents and Lincolniana from militaria dealers Mohawk Arms, who have over fifty years experience. Provenance, available to potential bidders, includes a copy of Mohawk’s 1975 catalog listing which describes their ten-year search for accredited Hitler-owned items, of which this bottle is one, illustrated, and noting that it came from the Berghof. They state: ‘…In 1945 a team of U.S. Army demolition experts were dispatched to the Berghof to completely destroy the Hitler summer residence. One of the G.I.s placed one of the bottles from the cellar in his jacket before the entire building was completely destroyed (with its contents). He then smuggled the bottle home…’. Accreditation mentioned in the description has been lost, but present is a copy of Mohawk’s 1975 letter to the purchaser, invoice, and a copy of the catalog listing. As there was slight leakage, the bottle has been re-corked but remnants of the original cork are included. Unique!



" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
*As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Available for Amazon Prime
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker